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A Simple Methodology to Evaluate the Disproportionate Impacts of Fare and Service Changes on Protected Populations in a Fixed Guide-way System By Vijay.

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Presentation on theme: "A Simple Methodology to Evaluate the Disproportionate Impacts of Fare and Service Changes on Protected Populations in a Fixed Guide-way System By Vijay."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Simple Methodology to Evaluate the Disproportionate Impacts of Fare and Service Changes on Protected Populations in a Fixed Guide-way System By Vijay Mahal HDR Engineering May 11, 2011 13 th TRB Applications Conference Reno

2 Presentation Purpose Objectives: Define the problem / Explain equity impacts Review existing methods Discuss HDR method Present an example

3 The Problem Public transportation is A public service Most often uses Federal funds Service and Fare changes impacts people Are protected populations impacted disproportionately? If so, mitigation is required

4 Equity Impacts: Title VI requirements What is “Title VI Requirements” ? Who needs to comply ? When is it required ? Why is it required ?

5 Fare and Service Changes Fare: Across the board increase Increase on minimum fares only Increase on some selected modes only Increase in transfer fares Service: Route modifications Service reductions Service elimination

6 How do you measure impacts? Using travel models Surveys Simple sketch planning techniques Note: FTA does not endorse any particular method

7 HDR’s Methodology Developed in 2010 for a fixed guide-way system. First applied to BART. It is a Sketch planning approach. Does not require large data. Easy to understand (most FTA reviewers are not modelers)

8 HDR’s Methodology Six steps involved Step 1: Identify where protected populations live (in GIS) Step 2: Delineate station catchment area. Estimate average boarding fares at each station before and after fare increase Step 3: Determine magnitude of protected populations in the station catchment area

9 HDR’s Methodology Step 4: Compute system wide average fare for each protected group (before & after) Step 5: Compare % increase in fares for protected groups with non-protected groups Step 6: Use professional judgment or statistical tests to determine if disparity exists

10 Example Ex: Lagrange County Transportation Authority (LCTA) LCTA wants to increase rail fares by 10 %. CBD surcharge by 5 %. System has distance based fare Question: Will there be any disproportionate impacts associated with this fare increase ?

11 Data needed Fare tables Station to station passenger flows (if available) Census Data / ACS Data Catchment area definition

12 Step 1: Identify Protected Groups Map the Distribution of minority, non- minority, low-income and non-low-income populations. Definitions must be consistent with MPO’s standards

13 Step 2: Delineate catchment Area / Estimate Ave. fares Delineate catchment area Use data from survey Or 1/3 mile for rail Or 1/4 mile for Bus Estimate average boarding fares for each station Simple average Average weighted by trips

14 Step 2: Estimate Average Boarding Fares

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18 Average boarding fares Sycamore Ctr: Ave. Boarding Fare: $ 3.35 (before fare increase) What does it represent ?

19 Percent increase in boarding fares Sycamore Ctr: Ave. Boarding Fare: $ 3.73 (after fare increase) Fare Increase: 11.40 % for all people in the catchment area

20 Percent increase in boarding fares Percent increase is a function of: Trip flows Increase in min. boarding fee Increase in CBD surcharge

21 Fare Increase for the System Simple average Average weighted by population Average weighted by protected population

22 Step 3: Estimate the magnitude of Protected Populations US Census, ACS Dealing with Overlapping areas

23 Step 4: Compute System wide Average Fare

24 Step 5: Compare Percentages Ave. fare for Minorities: 12.96% Ave. fare for Non-minorities: 12.67% Ave. fare for Low-income pop: 12.31% Ave. fare for Non-low-inc pop: 12.01%

25 Step 6: Determination of Disparate Impact Use professional judgment Use statistical methods

26 Closing Remarks HDR method is Simple and logical Doesn’t require large data Can be expanded to any system Acceptable to FTA


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